Although the minimum federal standards must be met and enforced, states are capable of making their own legal requirements as they see fit. The main requirement is that these more stringent laws must be deemed constitutional to the residents of that state. Recently, the state that I am a resident of, Washington State, made somewhat of a groundbreaking decision in a civil rights case decision. In the following paper, I will discuss this decision in detail and the potential impact of this decision involved in other current events.

There is a somewhat interesting relationship between the State and Federal systems of reporting discrimination. Although the case decision rests ultimately with the federal court system, a case must first be filed with the appropriate state government if applicable. This means that if the state the act of discrimination takes place in has state law and a government body to rule on discrimination cases, the case must first be heard at this level.

American Civil Liberties Union

English: A page from American Civil Liberties Unio...

English: Mike German, former FBI agent, now Nation...

Based on hearings at these state court levels, many states have shown a pattern of being more accepting of change. For this reason, it is easier in many cases to write new precedents at the state level. If enough time is given to an issue and many states rule to set new precedent on a certain issue, then the case will potentially be more viable for a Supreme Court ruling in its favor. The relationship between the State and Federal System seems to be one of balance. If left unchecked by the Federal courts the State systems would all run their own direction with little to no equitability from state to state. Conversely, without the State systems in place to continually challenge new situations the Federal court and legal system would be even more resistant...

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... New York, and they quickly spread to other states. Around the middle of the 1800s, the child savers movement, consisting of prominent Americans, began to fight for the establishment of a separate juvenile justice system ...

... states as well. States such as Utah, Maryland, Missouri, Texas, Louisiana, and Washington have adopted similar methods. Bias in the Juvenile Justice SystemThis section highlights a few points in the juvenile justice system ... court case. Cases that do reach the juvenile courts ...

... New York State changed its waiver law in 1978 to allow youths as young as 14 to be charged for violent offenses, but violent crime rates among New York City youths did not decline in comparison to Philadelphia, which had no such transfer law. When Idaho passed a new law ...

... stated earlier, age discrimination is difficult to prove because of the subtle biased, and covert actions, and attitudes of younger managers. However, the EEOC, the governing body for civil action suits is vastly becoming clogged up with cases, as we will discuss next. In the court system ...

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